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Congressional Stock Trades

Which members of Congress trade $NOW?

19 members of Congress have disclosed 141 $NOW transactions — 83 buys and 58 sells.

Source: QuiverQuant congressional trading disclosures. Filings report a dollar range, not an exact amount. A disclosure is not proof of wrongdoing.

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Members of Congress who trade $NOW

Each member's disclosed $NOW transactions, ordered by the number of trades. "Buys" and "sells" count disclosed purchase and sale transactions; the dollar figure is the sum of the lower bound of each disclosed range, so treat it as an at least estimate.

Members of Congress trading $NOW (Source: QuiverQuant disclosures)
Member of Congress Party State Trades Buys Sells Disclosed volume (≥)
Ro Khanna Democrat CA 63 36 27 $392063
Josh Gottheimer Democrat NJ 19 9 10 $19019
Diana Harshbarger Republican TN 14 12 2 $14014
Gilbert Ray Cisneros, Jr. Democrat CA 9 3 6 $23009
Lisa C. McClain Republican MI 7 4 3 $7007
Robert P. Bresnahan, Jr. Republican PA 4 3 1 $4004
Michael T. McCaul Republican TX 3 3 0 $17003
Dan Newhouse Republican WA 3 1 2 $3003
Kevin Mullin Democrat CA 2 2 0 $16002
Bruce Westerman Republican AR 2 1 1 $2002
Byron Donalds Republican FL 2 2 0 $2002
Dwight Evans Democrat PA 2 1 1 $2002
Greg Stanton Democrat AZ 2 1 1 $2002
John J. McGuire III Republican VA 2 1 1 $2002
Tina Smith Democrat MN 2 1 1 $2002
Val T. Hoyle Democrat OR 2 1 1 $2002
Tony Wied Republican WI 1 1 0 $1000001
Jefferson Shreve Republican IN 1 0 1 $50001
William R. Keating Democrat MA 1 1 0 $1001

Source: QuiverQuant congressional trading disclosures. Disclosed dollar ranges; a trade is not proof of wrongdoing.

About this data

Campaign finance figures are aggregated from public Federal Election Commission filings (public domain). Stock trades, lobbying, and contract figures are derived from disclosures compiled by QuiverQuant. Contributions are grouped by the donor's reported employer — they are not OpenSecrets industry clusters, and the totals combine individual contributions with affiliated PAC activity where reported.

Contributions and disclosures are not proof of influence. They show who gave and what was reported, not why a member voted a particular way. Amounts reflect the cycle or as-of dates noted beside each figure and may be revised as later filings are processed.

Want to dig deeper or request the underlying records yourself? See our FOIA guide, or go straight to the FEC data portal and QuiverQuant.

govtransparencyproject.org

Government Transparency Project is an independent, non-governmental publication. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operated by the U.S. government or any federal agency. Data is sourced from public APIs (FRED (Federal Reserve), U.S. Treasury, Congress.gov, Bureau of Labor Statistics).

For official U.S. government information, visit USA.gov.